Constitutional
Con Men
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
During
my
May 7 debate with Harry Jaffa at the Independent Institute in
Oakland, California, Jaffa made several statements that literally
caused some jaws to drop in the audience along with looks of utter
disbelief. (His supporters grinned and nodded approvingly). He stated,
for instance, that "Lincoln never did anything that was unconstitutional;"
that Virginia never reserved the right to withdraw from the Union
when she ratified the Constitution; and that the British government
never recognized the colonies or states individually in the Treaty
of Paris. There was never any such thing as state sovereignty, in
other words, and nothing Lincoln ever did – even unilaterally suspending
the writ of habeas corpus and having the military arrest thousands
of Northern citizens – violated the Constitution.
One
gets a very different perspective if one reads Jonathan Elliot’s
Debates
in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal
Constitution, edited by James McClellan and Mel Bradford
and reprinted by J. River Press in 1989 – or the original ratification
documents, for that matter. One finds that this is what the Virginia
delegates said:
We,
the delegates of the people of Virginia . . . Do, in the name
and behalf of the people of Virginia, declare and make known that
the powers granted under the Constitution being derived from the
people of the United States may be resumed by them whensoever
the same shall be perverted to their injury or oppression, and
that every power not granted thereby remains with them at their
will . . .
New
York made a similar declaration: "We, the delegates of the
people of New York . . . do declare and make known that the powers
of government may be reassumed by the people whenever it shall become
necessary to their happiness . . ." And Rhode Island made an
almost identical declaration: "We, the delegates of the people
of Rhode Island and Plantations, duly elected . . . do declare and
make known . . . that the powers of government may be resumed by
the people whenever it shall become necessary to their happiness
. . ."
Jaffa
is the master of what Joe Stromberg calls the "dark art"
of "reinterpreting" documents such as these to mean not
what they say in plain English but what he wishes them to say in
a way that is consistent with his political proclivities.
During
the debate Jaffa relied on his quite substantial reputation to simply
declare that the British government did not recognize the states
individually in the 1783 Treaty of Paris at the conclusion of the
American Revolution. I could only respond that I made it a point
to re-read the treaty in preparation for the debate, and that Jaffa
was wrong. I should have brought a copy of the Treaty with me, for
here is what Article I says:
His
Britannic Majesty acknowledges the said United States, viz. New
Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island, and Providence Plantations,
Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland,
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, to be free,
sovereign and independent States; and he treats with them as such,
and for himself, his heirs and successors, relinquishes all claims
to the Government, proprietory and territorial rights of the same,
and every part thereof. ("Treaty with Great Britain," in Charles
Eliot, ed., The Harvard Classics, vol. 43, American
Historical Documents, p. 175).
This
is important, for the founding documents consistently make the point
that the states are sovereign and are establishing a Union to act
as their agent. That’s why, whenever the phrase "United States"
appears in the Constitution, it is in the plural – to signify that
the individual sovereign states were voluntarily banding together
to form the Union. This use of language was turned on its head by
force of arms from 1861 to 1865 when, as Shelby Foote writes in
his book, The
Civil War, Americans quit saying "the United States
are" and began saying "the United States is," signifying
the transformation from a confederacy of sovereign states to a consolidated,
monolithic empire.
The
one comment of Jaffa’s that drew gasps and looks of disbelief was
his insistence that Lincoln never did anything that was unconstitutional.
These people were obviously aware that the Constitution does not
provide for a dictator but a president, and that generations of
historians have referred to Lincoln as a "dictator" but
a benevolent one. "Dictatorship played a decisive role in the
North’s successful effort to maintain the Union by force of arms,"
wrote Clinton Rossiter in Constitutional
Dictatorship. Lincoln’s "amazing disregard for the
Constitution was considered by nobody as legal," Rossiter also
proclaimed. "If Lincoln was a dictator, it must be admitted
that he was a benevolent dictator," wrote James Ford Rhodes
in his History
of the United States, a statement that was repeated almost
verbatim by James G. Randall in Constitutional
Problems Under Lincoln.
The
main reason why generations of historians have labeled Lincoln a
dictator (but also made an ends-justify-the-means defense of his
dictatorial behavior) is probably the fact that on April 27, 1861,
two weeks after Fort Sumter, he unilaterally suspended the writ
of habeas corpus and eventually ordered the federal army to arrest
between 13,000 and 38,000 Northern civilians who were suspected
of opposing his administration (this is the range of estimates that
exists in published literature). These people were never given any
due process at all.
The
chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, Roger B. Taney, issued
an opinion that such an act was unconstitutional because only Congress
has the power to do so. He cited former chief Justice John Marshall
as saying that "it is for the legislature to say so" if
habeas corpus is to be suspended; he cited Justice Joseph Story
as concurring with that opinion, as did English and American precedents;
and he pointed out that the suspension of habeas corpus appears
in the Constitution under the section on legislative, not executive
powers.
If
an American president can unilaterally suspend habeas corpus, Taney
wrote, then "the people of the United States are no longer
living under a government of laws; but every citizen holds life,
liberty and property at the will and pleasure of the army officer
in whose military district he may happen to be found." Lincoln
simply ignored Taney’s opinion.
The
jaw droppers at the Independent Institute debate must have also
been aware of Lincoln’s demolition of the First Amendment during
his administration to have reacted with such looks of disbelief.
There were hundreds of opposition newspapers in the North, and many
of them were shut down and their editors and owners thrown into
military prisons without any due process. For example, on May 18,
1864 Lincoln issued an order to General John Dix that read as follows:
"You will take possession by military force, of the printing
establishments of the New York World and Journal of Commerce . .
. and prohibit any further publication thereof . . . you are therefore
commanded forthwith to arrest and imprison . . . the editors, proprietors
and publishers of aforesaid newspapers." Dix complied, and
hundreds of newspapers were censored (see Dean Sprague’s Freedom
Under Lincoln).
The
history books also discuss how federal troops were ordered to interfere
with Northern elections (Lincoln won New York by 7,000 votes in
1864 "with the help of federal bayonets," according to
David Donald in Lincoln
Reconsidered); all telegraph communication was censored;
the railroads were nationalized; new states were created unconstitutionally;
and the Tenth Amendment was all but destroyed by the war.
Even
Lincoln’s own attorney general, Edward Bates, was of the opinion
that Lincoln’s orchestration of the secession of western Virginia
from the rest of the state was unconstitutional. Article IV, Section
3 of the U.S. Constitution reads: "New States may be admitted
by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed
or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor
any state be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts
of States, without the consent of the Legislatures of the States
concerned as well as of the Congress" (emphasis added).
West
Virginia was unconstitutionally carved out of Virginia, and since
it did not even exist as a state, its non-existent legislature could
not have consented, as required by the Constitution. A puppet government
was established in Alexandria, Virginia, run by Republican Party
operatives, which guaranteed a few more electoral votes for Lincoln
in the 1864 election.
I’m
sure Jaffa can come up with some tongue-twisting, Clintonian "spin"
as to why these realities are not really realities. He’s been doing
it all his life. And he absolutely must continue doing so, for the
entire case against states’ rights rests on the assumption that
Lincoln was only enforcing the Constitution when he launched his
invasion. The Southern states were dissatisfied with the results
of a duly constituted election, and that is no reason to secede.
Jaffa repeated this during the debate and has done so in many of
his writings. His position is that no state ever has a right to
secede, for any reason, as long as the constitutional rules of elections
are followed. Presumably, this would hold true if say, a Southern
sectional candidate were to be elected president and, with his party
in control of Congress, enacted a flat 80 percent income tax on
the Northern states and a 20 percent flat tax on the Southern states,
while making interstate migration illegal. That was roughly the
tax situation after Lincoln was elected, with Southerners paying
as much as 80 percent of all tariff revenues which, at the time,
were the primary form of federal taxation.
If
Lincoln was not, in fact, a devoted champion of the Constitution,
the whole anti-states’ rights house of cards collapses. If he disregarded
the Constitution and acted like a dictator, no matter how noble
his ends might have been, then the sanctity-of-the-Constitution
argument against secession goes out the window. This, in my opinion,
is why Jaffa must continue to make such outrageously ahistorical
statements.
May
15, 2002
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is
the author of the LRC #1 bestseller, The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War
(Forum/Random House 2002) and professor of economics at Loyola College
in Maryland.
Copyright
2002 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives
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